The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Moment 189: This Is The Real Reason You Can't Change Your Life: Doctor Alok Kanojia
Episode Date: November 29, 2024In this moment, world-leading men’s mental health coach and psychiatrist, Dr K discusses the ways people try and fail to put trauma behind them as well as the REAL way to overcome it. Most people w...ho have a history of trauma will try and overcompensate in the way they build their future lives. For instance, people can try to overcome the trauma of bullying by becoming invisible or becoming successful to overcoming past shame. However, no matter what people do to adapt to the historic trauma, it still remains in the mind. This can be seen in peoples responses to events that trigger memories of their past trauma. Instead of this overcompensation, Dr K says that you need to dismantle your worldview by slowing down the mind and paying attention to your thoughts and feelings. He believes that this awareness is a superpower that everyone is ignoring, as the more aware you are in the present moment, the more your problems fade away. Listen to the full episode here - Spotify- https://g2ul0.app.link//Y3cK1DDNTOb Apple - https://g2ul0.app.link//nbunQIHNTOb Watch the Episodes On Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Dr Alok: https://www.healthygamer.gg/dr-alok-kanojia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
No amount of fixing your life will make that kid go away.
Right, so like when I work with people who are,
I see you smiling.
So like when I work with people who have been traumatized,
they will build amazing lives,
but they still carry that kid with them.
And the kid will come out at times.
There'll be particular times where if I'm a little bit,
like if I treat you in the wrong way,
you'll notice that you feel like that kid again.
When you're idle, you feel like that kid again.
So that psychological, that neuronal wiring is there.
So you can build all this wonderful stuff,
and there's authenticity.
It's not like you're faking it.
This is a really common misconception,
that are you faking?
No, you're genuinely confident, you're genuinely authentic.
You can't fake it and get to where you are.
And at the same time, the wounds that we experience
leave scars.
Yeah, 100%.
And the real way to heal is to go back to that moment
and deal with that kid, right?
You have to dismantle the worldview that you have,
which is how you heal trauma.
Is when we get traumatized, we adapt.
In order to come out of this situation,
I need to learn this particular thing.
So some kids that I've worked with
adapt by becoming invisible.
That's what I did.
I got bullied a lot.
So what do I do?
I learn how to be invisible.
Some people adapt by being successful.
So if I'm successful, it's an antidote to my shame.
I don't have to be ashamed anymore if I'm successful.
But that old injury is still there.
Yeah, and this is why it's so complex,
because what you've just said is so unbelievably true,
but it's where the misconception happens,
because I don't go home and I'm not insecure
or I'm not unconfident.
I think when I'm on my own,
I'm very, very okay with who I am, with myself.
I'm very, very, like I feel...
Like the guy that you experience on camera
is very close to who I am
when I'm in the hotel room alone at night.
However, it doesn't mean that I still don't have
those childhood bruises
and that they can't be pressed by various things.
And so it's this sort of...
Because, you know, when we say these words like insecurity and shame,
you'd think that like I walk into the green room over there and I'm like,
oh, that's not my life.
But when I...
Where I know that there's still something there
is I go, how the, why are you still driving like this?
Exactly.
When you are so well aware that it will not lead
to any more happiness in any context.
Like I'm so logically aware that becoming more
will not have any impact on the things that matter.
Yet, here I am, still building businesses.
And this is the constant thing I battle with.
So I go, okay, well, there must be a force that you're consciously unaware of
that's making you go, go on, go on.
Exactly. Yeah.
Right, so let's understand a couple of things.
Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful, Stephen, beautiful.
So a couple of things to understand.
We think about healing as one spectrum, right?
So if I'm at negative 100, I can't also be at positive 100.
Those two things cancel out.
That's not how it works.
So if I give you a glass of water, and then I piss in it,
and then I add sugar, it doesn't remove the piss.
These are both independent things.
This is what tends to happen.
This is what we don't understand about trauma. Removing the piss requires removing the piss.
No amount of sugar will take it out of the drink.
Okay?
So no amount of, this is mistake number one,
no amount of building something good
will remove something bad.
Okay?
So healing, and it's also like, you know,
if I break a leg, no amount of bench press
will heal my leg. Like I can build as much as I want to,
I can fix my hair, I can brush my teeth,
but the leg is broken, the leg is broken.
Same is true of the mind, okay?
Second thing is what happens is we have,
like our consciousness is divided,
now we're gonna get kind of technical and off the rails.
So we have all of these like dormant pieces
of our consciousness that activate in certain situations.
And all you have to do is pay attention to yourself
in a five-minute period, and you'll see this.
So when I walk into a bathroom that I've never used before,
then I start thinking about, OK, where's the flush?
Where's the toilet?
How do I use this toilet?
So I'll activate dormant information all the time.
So if someone asks me what's the quadratic equation,
that information is there and dormant in my mind
and it gets activated.
So one of the biggest mistakes we make about healing
is we look at what is active in our mind 90% of the time
and we assume that the injury is no longer there.
That's not the case.
Does that make sense?
100%.
Right, so the injury just goes dormant. Then there are certain things that happen
that can trigger that injury.
That's what we call triggers, right?
So if I'm traumatized, if we look at like PTSD
and I've been traumatized by a bomb going off,
literally my brain has certain circuits
that scans my perceptual environment
and decides what to activate.
So there are ways stillness makes you feel small.
And fuck you if you're ever gonna be small again.
Never again, never again, never again.
I would bet money that if you sit by yourself
and you're not occupied, right,
that's why you have to watch crime shows.
Because if you don't watch crime shows,
you're gonna be still. And if you don't watch crime shows, you're going to be still.
And if you're still, that's unacceptable.
OK?
So dormant things have to be healed where they belong.
You don't need to worry, by the way.
It's in your karma.
It's going to get healed, and it's coming.
Yeah, I was laughing because it's so true.
Yeah.
Just laughing at the fact that when I go to Bali,
I end up, that's like where I end up writing a book.
And I'm like.
Right.
And people would kill for that, right? So many people out there are like, oh, man where I end up writing a book. And I'm like... Right. And people would kill for that, right?
So many people out there are like,
oh man, I would love to be you.
No, you guys don't want to be Steven.
I know you think you do, but this is the crazy thing.
We, each as human beings, have our own journey.
And are you privileged and should you be grateful
and should people aspire to be you?
Absolutely, but they don't want to be you.
Like, your own problems are enough.
They don't need yours too.
Yeah, amen. So now the question is, how do we heal? but they don't want to be you. Like, your own problems are enough. They don't need yours too. Amen.
So now the question is, how do we heal?
So I think the problem is like, no amount
of fixing things over there is going to go back to this.
And this is where we can look at the science of healing trauma.
So here are the steps.
First thing is safety, so that we can get neuroplasticity.
Second thing is emotional awareness
and emotional regulation.
And this allows us for number three,
which is really important, which is identity.
So if we look at our human sense of identity,
how do you develop an identity?
So if I were to ask you in three sentences,
Stephen, who are you?
My identity.
Yeah, tell me who's Stephen.
To myself or just to the world or is that the same thing?
Tell me about Stephen.
I'm an entrepreneur.
I guess I'm a podcaster now.
And I am going to say a Manchester United fan.
Okay. So I think those are three features, right?
So I've read your bio.
So the other thing that you tend to do in your bio
is there's a narrative, right?
You were a college dropout.
You started a company, right?
You talked about this Louis Vuitton bag phase,
and then there's the post-Louis Vuitton bag phase.
And even before we had this podcast,
you were talking to me about the phases of your life.
So identity requires a timeline.
Okay.
Now the interesting thing is if we look at the
formative moments of your life, they all have emotion.
So this is what's really important.
If you have an identity that is bad in any way,
you can never change that identity without emotions.
So what happens, so when I tell my story,
it's like I was a kid, nine years old,
I got put on these expectations, dropped out of college,
went to become a monk, went to medical school,
became a doctor, now I started this whole
helping random people on the internet thing.
So each of those were emotional experiences.
So who we are is a narrative
of our most emotional experiences.
And we see this in all of our superhero movies, right?
Batman had this tragic experience where his parents were shot by the Joker,
and then he became something, right?
There are all these moments, these powerful emotional moments.
So if your emotions are dulled by drugs, by technology, by pornography,
by watching serial killer
shows, you will never change who you are. It is impossible. The neuroscience of your
identity and development requires emotional experience. Okay? So with trauma, that's the
next thing that happens. Once we have access to emotions, then we can become someone else.
Now the problem with trauma is that before we become someone else, the beliefs we have
about ourselves become our destiny.
So if I think to myself, I'm a loser.
So when I was interviewing for residency, I went to an interview somewhere on the West
Coast and the director of the program called me at the end of the interview and they're
like, we don't understand why you're here.
I was like, what do you mean you don't understand
why I'm here?
And they're like, your application is really good.
You could end up at any program in the country.
Like, why did you pick us?
And like, I was like, I picked y'all because I liked
the way that your hospital works, and I like that
the city it's in, and I'm super into complementology.
Like, what do you mean, why am I here?
Right, but the way that he approached it
with a lack of confidence, he's like our program sucks,
and they had some problems with the program at the time,
so it kinda makes sense.
But this becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If I go into a job interview,
and I feel a lack of confidence,
if I believe I'm a loser,
then I'm not gonna get the job.
You used to go to clubs and buy bottles of champagnes
and thought that you were a loser,
didn't end up where you wanted to go.
So this is what a lot of people don't understand.
Everyone's focused on productivity.
But the single most important thing
that will determine your future
is your sense of who you are.
And that's not like some,
oh, a spiritual get connected with you.
This is like fucking science, right?
If you believe you are a loser,
the empathic circuits of other people's brains
will detect that in you,
and they will treat you like a loser.
You carry who you are with you.
That's why you get into failed relationship number one,
failed relationship number two,
failed relationship number three, until you changed.
And when you change, your sense of identity changes,
then your future will change.
The last thing to do is on a more microscopic level,
look at these responses within yourself.
So you asked me at the very beginning of the podcast,
and now we're coming full circle,
how do you start understanding yourself?
So you look at the drives within yourself, right? Why can't I sit still?
And this is gonna be so hard for you
because if I told you,
this is hilarious,
if I told you, Stephen, if you wanna heal your trauma,
you need to go to Bali, you need to sit on a beach,
and you need to do nothing,
you will still turn that into growth and progress.
Because what you'll say is,
oh, this is what Dr. K told me to heal my trauma.
So now I'm doing even more important work
than a podcast for 10 million people on the internet.
Now I'm doing the healing of my trauma, which is the goal.
And you're still running away from yourself.
There's no way you can run away from it.
Your mind will transform the very thing that you do
into the problem.
And that's what trauma does.
I'll give you a chance to respond,
because I've been waiting.
I'm waiting for the solution, Dr. K.
Yeah, so, I mean, in your case, I think it's like, sit.
Just sit.
And you have to be careful,
because if your mind turns the sitting into a goal
that I have to achieve, oh, I need to sit,
and that will be my growth.
No, no fucking goal.
Just sit, waste your time.
What you need to learn how to do is waste your time.
Do nothing, sit, be with yourself
and watch out for that mind.
The second thing is awareness, okay?
So as you sit, you will notice all of these things come up.
So this is like, you wanted to,
you asked me a question at the beginning, how do you start?
So what I would say is sit for five minutes, 15 minutes,
sometimes we'll tell people to stare at a wall for an hour.
And just look at what on earth goes on inside you.
You will discover that it is a zoo of thoughts,
feelings, emotions, drives,
panics, worries, distractions.
Your internal environment is such a mess.
So what we need to do is just kind of calm that stuff down
by like just letting it kind of run out of steam.
So this is a principle of the mind
that if we feed our mind, it'll continue to grow.
But like what we need to do is just let it run out of steam.
So just sit and do nothing for a while. People don't realize the part of our
brain that exerts willpower has something to do with this part of our brain called the
anterior cingulate cortex. The anterior cingulate cortex is a piece of where willpower comes
from, but it is also the part of our brain that monitors conflict.
So willpower and monitoring a conflict
are actually technically the same thing.
The same part of the brain activates.
And if you guys, if you pay attention
to your own internal experience,
what you'll realize is anytime you're using willpower,
there's an internal struggle
that you are paying attention to.
It's like, I don't wanna order chicken,
I wanna order fried chicken.
So there's a monitoring of the conflict that goes on,
that's anytime you're exerting willpower,
there's this thing this way and this thing this way,
but you are aware of it.
You can't exert willpower if you're behaving automatically.
That's why it's so easy to get lost in doom scrolling,
because you're not even aware of what you're doing
before and then four hours have gone by
and you're like, what?
What happened?
You're not aware.
So this is the crazy thing
from a neuroscientific perspective,
and this is what the yogis will teach as well.
Awareness is willpower.
Awareness is self-control.
And I've worked with tons of addicts.
They come up for air, and maybe you've done this, maybe people at home have
done this, you go on this binge, and then you come up for air.
And you're like, what have I been doing for a couple of days?
What I've been doing for a couple of hours, then you gain
that awareness again. So the more that you are aware in the
present moment, the more your problems will literally melt
away. It's like crazy.
I don't quite know how it works, but this is what yoga teaches you, that as you are
aware, as you are aware, as you are aware, you stop rejecting things, you start accepting
things, you focus on the present, all this stuff that everyone talks about is actually
rooted in awareness.
And we live in a society where I say, if I say you don't need habits, you don't need
willpower, you don't need discipline, all you need is awareness, people will reject me.
That doesn't mean it isn't true.
And the more that you explore awareness,
the more you will realize,
like I used to think it was like 50-50,
I'm now at like 90% of the problem is awareness.
And that's weird.
No, but does that,
because we tend to look for solutions that involve action.
Like, buy that thing, make that list,
go to that meeting, watch that thing.
It's all about action, action,
action as a solution to our problems.
So I was expecting you to tell me that the solution to everything we've
discussed here is like the seven step process of like,
write this thing down, say this thing and you know.
Okay, so let's understand this, okay?
You work really hard, Stephen.
Is it hard to work hard?
For me?
Yeah.
No.
Okay, so now we have to understand
why is it not hard for you to work hard?
Why is it not hard for you to work hard? It's... why is it not hard for me to work hard? Because it feels good to work hard?
Absolutely.
So, you're prob... this is the whole problem that everyone makes.
So, Stephen, you started a company when?
First one, I was very young, but we won't count that because I didn't register the company.
So, the first one that was registered
would have been when I was 18.
Okay, and you started how many companies
or been involved in how many companies?
10, 20, yeah.
And made like millions and millions of dollars and stuff.
Yeah, right?
Started a podcast, you've got how many millions
of subscribers now?
Across the platforms, maybe 10 million.
Okay, cool, right?
So like, this is a lot of work.
And everyone's like, oh my God, I want to be like Stephen.
But the whole thing is, it's not hard for you.
It's hard for you to not do it.
So this is what I'm saying.
You don't need to focus on the action.
It's the internal thing that drives you like a fucking slave that is responsible
for your success.
If someone else wants a fraction of what you have, 10% of what you have, they don't need
to duplicate your actions, they need to duplicate what's going on on the inside.
This is exactly my point.